| Citation: | Activities Possibly outside CIA’s Legislative Charter [Central Intelligence Agency Directorate of Intelligence Sensitive Activities; Attached to Cover Sheet; Includes Memoranda Entitled “DCS Domestic Activity”; “Activity Related to Domestic Events” [Four Versions]; “Contacts with David Young”; “Involvement in Domestic Affairs [Excised]”; “Questionable NPIC Projects”; and “Sensitive Activities”], Top Secret, Memorandum, May 08, 1973, 25 pp. |
| Collection: | The CIA Family Jewels Indexed |
| Item Number: | FJ00020 |
| Origin: | United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Directorate of Intelligence. Deputy Director |
| From: | Proctor, Edward W. |
| To: | Schlesinger, James R. |
| Individuals/ Organizations Named: |
Al-Amin, Jamil; Anderson, Jack; Bush, Archer; Carmichael, Stokely; Clark, Ramsey; Cleaver, Eldridge; Colby, William E.; Columbia University; Eisenbeiss, Harry; Fonda, Jane; Helms, Richard M.; Hunt, E. Howard; Lehman, Richard; Mitchell, John N.; Murphy, James R.; Nixon, Richard M.; Rostow, Walt W.; Smith, R. Jack; Students for a Democratic Society; United States Intelligence Board; United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Directorate of Intelligence; United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Directorate of Intelligence. Assistant Deputy Director; United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Directorate of Intelligence. Central Reference Service; United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Directorate of Intelligence. Domestic Contact Service; United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Directorate of Intelligence. National Photographic Interpretation Center; United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Directorate of Intelligence. Office of Current Intelligence; United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Directorate of Management and Services. Office of Communications; United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Directorate of Management and Services. Office of Security; United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Directorate of Operations. Counterintelligence Staff; United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Directorate of Operations. Covert Action Staff; United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Directorate of Operations. Deputy Director; United States. Central Intelligence Agency. General Counsel; United States. Department of Justice; United States. Department of Justice. Attorney General; United States. Department of Justice. Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs; United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation; United States. Foreign Broadcast Information Service; United States. Marine Corps; United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration; United States. National Foreign Intelligence Board. Committee on Imagery Requirements Exploitation; United States. National Security Agency; United States. National Security Council; United States. National Security Council. 40 Committee; United States. Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs; United States. White House; White, Lawrence K.; Young, David R. |
| Subjects: | Arabic language | Argentina | Awards | Biographical intelligence | Black power movement | Caribbean Region | Chinese language | Civil unrest | Communists and Communist countries | Courts-martial | Cuba | Defectors | Domestic intelligence | Ellsberg, Daniel Psychiatrist’s Office Burglary (1971) | Executive Order 11652 (1972) | Hanoi (North Vietnam) | Information security | Intellectual property rights | ITAR-TASS (Soviet Union news agency) | Libel | Military training | Motion pictures | Narcotics | National Security Act (1947) | Natural disasters | New China News Agency | New York | Opium production | Photographic intelligence | Political activists | Prisoners of war | Radio broadcasts | Records management | Satellite reconnaissance | Students | Taiwan | Telephone monitoring | United States citizens | Vietnamese Conflict protest movements | Watergate Affair (1972-1974) | Yugoslavia |
| Abstract: | Describes Central Intelligence Agency Directorate of Intelligence activities possibly outside CIA’s charter, including monitoring narcotics trade, overseas telephone calls, Caribbean nationalist movements, student and anti-war groups, and other U.S. citizens; telephone and satellite surveillance; and linguistic services to outside agencies; indicates that John Mitchell received secret daily intelligence briefings. |
| Full Text: | Document – PDF – this link will open in a new window (711 KB) |
